William "Bunny Rugs" Clarke has been the lead vocalist/guitarist and a songwriter for
Third World since the mid-'70s. Since the late '80s, he has also made a bid for a solo career on the side. Raised in East Kingston, Clarke's earliest musical influences included
Nat King Cole and
Aretha Franklin. He learned to sing in church. At age 15, Clarke accepted an invitation to audition at the Kittymat Club and became a member of
Charlie Hackett & the Souvenirs. At the same time he attended the Jamaica School of Arts & Crafts until 1968 when he moved to New York and joined Hugh Hendricks & the Buccaneers, a popular party band in Brooklyn. Clarke founded his own band,
the Wild Bunch, in 1971. Two years later he went back to Jamaica to replace
Jacob Miller as the lead singer with
Inner Circle. There he played with musicians who would later branch off to become Third World, including founding member Ibo Cooper. But while Cooper and others formed that group, Clarke returned to the states in the hopes of having a songwriting career with Atlantic Records. Third World came to New York in the late '70s and asked Bunny to become the new singer in place of Milton "Prilly" Hamilton. Rugs contributed many songs to Third World's classic second album 96 Degrees in the Shade. Since then, Rugs has become a key figure in creating Third World's image as one of the most versatile, adventurous reggae bands in the world. He and other group members began branching out and recording, producing and writing for other Jamaican performers in the late '80s. Rugs and fellow Third World mate
Cat Coore have both sung on Burrell's Xterminator label with such artists as
Capleton,
Beres Hammond and
Marcia Griffiths. In 1995, Rugs released a solo album Talking to You on Black Scorpio. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi